Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 19, 1884, Page 2

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For Neuralgia 3OR AND LABORERS, For Neuralgia For Neuralgia For Neuralgia Matters of Intercst For Employer and Employed. An International Convention of Win- Rt dow-glass Workers is to be held at St For Rheumatism Holen's, Lancashire, England, on July For Rheumatism Delegates will bo present from the For Rhe tism United States, Great Britain, France, Ny Bolgium aud Italy, It will be the largest convention of the kind ever held, and it For a Lame Back For a Lame Back For a Lame Back For a Lame Back Doctor Thomas' Eclectric Oil Doctor Thomas' Eelectric Oil Dector Thomas' Eclectric Oil Doctor Thomas' Eclectric Oil SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, 50, roMAas EorrcTrIO OIL-§] ([ is expected that very important results will be arrived at. One of the questions to be discussed will be the emigration of skilled workmen from one country to an- other at the instance of employers who are engaged in contests with their work- men. An effort will be made to equalize wages in all countries as far as possible, considering the cost of living. The glass workmen of the world aro already organ- izod to a certain extent, but when this conventfon closes it is expected that measures will have been adopted to pre- vent the frequent contests that have taken place during recent years, The stove manufacturers are only en- toring upon the contest with their work- men, Thedifficulties between employers and workmen may be traced in part to the action of Perry & Co., of New York, who frequently have had 1,000 conviots in their employ at 50 cents per day, free of rent and taxes By convict labor this firm has been able to undersell the man- ufacturers of the United States and drive ) them to the wall. The recent reductions 'oLTAI0 TELT and Sther Bwcrmo | ¢ foMe O Gomt o 3 Days: Ta TO |in wages were brought about by this firm 3 OR OLD, who are suffer- DERILITY, LOST VITALITY, and the workmen throughout ~ tho weat ‘il 611 thoro dlseares of i has stubbornly refused to submit to the FasEs, L i 1 Al xs and ) r) . . Ll Caviis “pecdy oot and compiete | conviot-labor basis. An effort is being metoration 10 HEALTI, Vioow and | MANUOOR | e in the west to start with non-union labor, but with unsatisfactory results. There is trouble on this question at Cin- cinnati, St. Louis, Chicago, Moline and weveral smaller towns in the interior. The OMAHA DAILY BEE---THURSDAY JUNE 19, 1884, the ordinary hand-sewing which is flnnc by seamstresses at home, for making & glove i a very elaborate affair, consisting of many processes, each of which has its own special workman or workwoman. Out of the 10,000 or 15,000 women who are more or less constantly employed in making the gloves sold by the great firm of Dent, Alleroft & Co., only 300 or 400 aro at work in the famous Worcester fac: tory, which may be regarded as the head- (uarters of the English glove trade. The rest work at home: but, as they go from the factory to the home, so they return from the home to the factory, for the plain sewing is only one of the many pro- cesses through which the skin passes in its progress from the back of the kid to the hand of the wearer. To supply the requisite materials for the gloves sold by a single firm alone which, however, it is fair to say, has more than half the trade in its own hands— nearly 5,000,000 kids and lambs are slaughtered annually. That is to say, 16,000 of 2-months-old innocents are killed every working day, year in and year out, to supply *“Dent's” with materi- al for their gloves. More gloves, how- ever, are sewn by women at home, and the employment thus afforded for the spare hours of wives and daughters in the counties of Worchester, Hereford, Ux- ford, Somerset, Devon Glouchester, is onoot the most important sources of female income. very elaborately organized. The glove making counties are mapped out into cir- cuits, each of which has its sewing clerk or commercial traveler, The firm em- ploy a number of clerks, who have each their own districts, and around these they travel every week, takinga cartload of gloves each round. The glove sewers of the district assemble at a fixed place— generally the village inn—and receive their work, which they tako home and deliver next week when the clerk comes ress YOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall, Mich, offects of youthfol errors, MANHOOD:: s ‘oay, lost inanhood, eto., ., 1 will send you particulars of o simplo and cortain m froo of charge. Send your address to ‘Moodus, Goun IN CASH GIVEN AWAY To the SMOKERS of Blackwell’s Genuine Bull Durham Smok- ing Tobacco. Pamphlet free. Ada o those suftering from tno western manufacturers have joined hands with their Pittsburg brothers to oppose the union, Philadelphia has 562 establishments dovoted to tho making of men’s and boy's clothing, in which are employed 9,192 men, 10,269 women and 936 chil- dren, turning out goods valued at $31,- 220,968, The pig-iron trade of the south is slow- ly improving. The Self-Acting Sewing Machine Com- pany of Leading hall street, London, has taken out and is working a patent which will save the necessity for the use of either hands or feet. ~The new moter drives the sewing machine by a process of clockwork, neither bulky nor compli- cated, Themotive power is completely under control, so that while it can be made to drive a needle at the rate of about 1,000 stitokes a minute it can al- 80 bo worked slowly. At a recent meeting of the Syndicate of French Tailorlsm in Paris, a member, M. Ducher, made a complaint which would seem to show that the taste for garments cut in the English style is rap- idly spreading among Frenchmen. So recently as 1875, M. Ducher said, there were only thirteen English tailors in Paris, doing businees at the amount of 1,400,000 franc a year, whereas at pres- ent there are thirty-nine, whose dealings amount to 13,600,000 franc. M. Ducher went on to give it as his opinion that English taste in dress is *‘horrible,” but at the same time he appealed to the pal riotism of his fellow countrymen to sup- port the native tradesmen Some of the'shoemakers of Philadel- g‘hh are contemplating the establishment V0. FOW The genuine has picture of BULL on every package. For particulars see our next announcement. 000,000 pounds of Half of thi is used in printing generally, while 600,- 000,000 pounds are used for newspapers. An average of eleven'and a half pounds is used by every Englishman, and ten imd a quarter pounds by every Amer- oan. The latest novelty in Sweden isan en- ormous engine which daily produces 1,000,000 boxes of matches, It receives the raw material (blocks of wood) at one end gives up at the other the matches neatly arranged in their boxes, ready to be packed. The wood, which in "the course of last summer, was brought over to Jonkopiug to bs made into matches, filled twenty steamers, The Willimantic Spool Thread com- pany, in Connecticut has been compelled to limit its production and sell out a por- tion of its great cstablishment to the Pullman Palace COar company, When the last congress was in session this great mouopul{ produced statistios to show that its brauch in England was losing money, while the business in this coun- try would utterly break down but for protection, But by last accounts the English concern was doing well, 'he Mauch Chunk (Penn.) Democraf says that the workmen in the Lehigh ore mines get sixty conts o day and live on raw bacon and dry bread. A fiood many of our locomotive works are short of orders, but still some of them are well supplied. The Ellis works at Schenectady, have orders on hand to keep them all summer. Work is being ing prosecuted on the McQueen locomo- tive work, at the same place, and work will be turned out this fall and winter, Some locomotive works are offering spe- cial texms to railroad companies, who whoJ;l 0 orders for the summer, in or- der that they may continue work, The powder manufrcturers are bowing to the power which is everywhere com- pelling restriction of production and combination for mutual protection. The Dupont L‘ompnny, n paying the Vulean Anhauser. Bests. i «++.Milwaukee, Krug's Omaha, Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine Wine. ED. MAURER. 12 ‘arnam St. DEB:LITY of the Generative Organs quickly cured by the CIVIALE METHOD. Adopted in all tho HOSPITALS OF FRANCE. Prompt return of VIGOR. Simplo cascs, 83 10 §8. Sovere oncs, §5 to §12. Pamphlot Eree, ~Civialo Romedial Agorio’, 166 Fuiton st., Now o PALYANG 81K} smody to N et AR S D T SRS #ANE00D REsToRED, et e S it pug mfi;.g;f;fi.;geg’gfl.:: Sy ress, VER, ¢ “atham Bt., Now Vork 718 Chartered by theStateof 1L noin for theexpress purposs of givingimmediate rellefin all chroni and pri- Gonorrhaea, 8 1o all their complicated forms, also al' discases of the Skin and Elood promptly relieved and permanentiycured by reme~ dica,testedin a Forty Years A7) Special Practice, Seminal | Manufaoturin; Company $75,000 to sus- ‘Weaki e 0 : ’ y theFace. Lont la.‘nnm,l,.%fi'.':&‘:h':‘a'."d’mfi penpend produotion for' a year, has sim- {ano experimenting. The appropriate r.r.edy ly followed in the wake of other manu- acturing interests in its efforts to arrest competition and prevent prices from dropping below remunerative limits. ho tendency to combination is de- veloping everywhere, The railroad pool. ing inaugurated this departure. The iron makers, lumbermen, wire manufact- gr"'f',"';“,,:fl,';'“"h';m urers, textile manufacturers, nailmakers A GOLDEN 80X F goops | and hardware people have all combined, h!fl.,m%-:{h. and now comes a Eropunition to pool the iwiab farke | milling interests, but as long as it is im- sty DR.HORNE'S ELEGTRIC BELT Ne Puuible to pool sui t and air it i Will cure ou koly that this will b IWJmL L Lumbags. ithoumatium, ar: 184t once used in each ca nsultations, per- #onal or by letter, sacredly confidential, Med. fcines sent by Mail andExpress, No mark package to indicate contents or sénder. Address DR JAMES,No. 204Washington 8t.,Chicago,IIl, O ———ee This Out S aplial MY g 478 Michael Motzler, of Philadelphia, is making & nice fortune dealing in bad alysis, Nouralgiu, Sciatica, | @688, which he gathers up wherover he iy, BTE Snd B | cun " got. thom, Ho sorta. them, ivides e Dripepais, C(::’:n i yolks from whites, and in manufactured piar, Linpoten form sells the substance to tauners, mor- et l“l.".;..l','; occo dressers, confectioners and paper anih makers. Oliver & Roberts, of Pittaburg. have just started their new wire-rod mill—the it |second in the country. It is a superb aine ore, 1485 Dougias seeet, . me ¢ | strusture; it will employ 400 men, and B o, 309! i Yvong | Will enable Oliver & Roberts to make all S MALH OFFIOK—Oppostts postotic, oo & Fren. th: rlnwhmnl::i‘l h'ul' theirhbarbod wire, 4 which they have heretofore had to import e s |, Hodmas's Drug shore’ 118 | 1o, abroad, placing their orders p(:h tlled ¢.0" D, moutbs ahead. The carpenters, coopers, stairbuilders, cabinetmakers and wook carvers of all the around again, As a rule, there are twenty to thirty workers in each village who do the plain sewing, some by hand and some by machine, They earn from ba. to 9s. the week, which is tho pay for one to two dozen pairs of gloves. PR E ARE YOU GOING TO EUROPE? In another column will be found the an nouncement of Messrs, THOS, COOK & SON ‘Lourist Agents, 261 Broadway, New York, rolative to the very complote arrangements they have made for tours In Ruraps the coming Spring and Summer. “Cook’s Excur- slonist,” containing maps and full particulars, will be malled to any address on receipt of 10 enta In the Darkness, M. Quad. We marched by the left flank along a blind roarin the woods until the trees no longer hindered our movements, and then the brigade came to a ‘‘front” and advanced in line. Here and there wo came upon our dead or wounded skir- mishers, and before we were quite clear of the woods we opened the lLines for a dozen or twenty men to pass to the rear driven foot by foot by an advancing line, There was smoke hanging low over woods and fields, but now and then I caught sight of flags and men and horses in our {front. Cannon were booming, muskets popping and officers shouting orders, and amidst the terrible racket we suddenly quickened our pace and drove tralght forward at the battery. The distans . was perhaps a hundred rods. It was likg’ hing into a fog. I stepped over two'wounded and three dead men, stumbled over a horse lying on his side, and loo] ! the on the left! We a8 we moved forw Now the nearest man was ten feet away. Now we halt-——now we close up—now 1 hear men cheering, and we breast for- ward into a fog which is cut and streaked with long, red tongues of flame. Ina minute more I can see the cannon wheels and the legs of the gunners under the smoke. Fear? No! Itis a wild exulta- tiou—a feeling that may truly be called devil I want to shoot and stab and kill some one. Iyell at the top of my volce. I grip thearm of the man on my left to hurry him forward, and I chuckle as I notice how fierce his look—how the hungry tiger can be read in his eyes. Then——! The sun had gone down. There was a spiteful roar of artillery—a vengeful sput- tering of musketry—a trembling of the oarth which hurt me, All this came ro me as T opened my eyes, but it came slow- ly. Dexd! I wondered for a moment whether I was or not. No! I had been hit—wounded. Where! There was no pain—not the slightest twinge. Ah! come to remember, I had stumbled againat a corpse just as the picture of the battle-field faded before my eyes. Ouri- ous that T should have lost consciousness in the fall. I would got up and hurry on and rejoin my company. 1 rose to a sitting position, and then— well, my right log stuck fast to the grass, The blood had poured out and dried to a paste, and all of a sudden a twinge of pain racked my very soul. All around me 1 saw the bodies of my comrades, * I called aloud, but not a soul answered, Nota man of us reached the battery (Grape and canister had saved the guns, To move was to feel the stabs of a dozen knives; but I drew myself along, inch by inch, to e stump, Then I had a prop at my back and could wait. The roar of the battle was dying away and grim night was mercifully hiding the horrible sights of a battle field, “Help!" A shadow passed me, never heeding the call, and knelt boside a dead body. It was that of a young Lieutenant in the Twelfth New York. I remembered his orying ‘‘Forward!” just as I fell I looked again, and the shadow covered its face with its hands and rocked too and fro cver the dead and moaned: o) J’hmblnd—my darling! They have robbed me of my ‘treasure-—they have turned my joy into deepest sorrow !" A shadow on my right. It moved slowly, with hands tightly pressed over the heart. It was tnat of an aged woman, The hair was snow white, the limbs weak und trembling, and the voice was choked and broken as it called: *‘Where is my hoy—where is my lying dead{” I pointed {o the body of a youtb, scarce 18, which was lying beside a bush whose every leaf and twig was spattered with blood, and she sank be- side it and sobbed: “*And this is the glory of war! They roh a poor old mother of her last born and then ring the bells for victory! Oh! God! Tam heart broken! Let me die beside him,"” Shadows fon my left. There were four of them. The trst was that of a wife and mother—the others her child ren, Tbl:i looked at me in mute appea and I oned them. At my feet with his broad breast shattered and torn large cities are well employed at good wages, Glovemakivg is unique as an em) loy- ment for women, t stands midway between the textile industriee, which can ouly be carried on in large factories, and } was & stalwart Sargeant of the Secon, Massachusetts, It was he who had dashed into the front ranks and encourd The whole system is|§ and sobbed the mot"or raised her hands to heaven anu crica ““‘Widowed—desolate-—brokent-hea ted! What is victory to me when he lies the corpse of husband and father,’ And yet another shadow came, It was that of a fafr young girl. _Fier beau- tiful face was deadly pale, her brown eyes wore filled with horror, her white teeth were shut tightly, as if she feared || that she would scream out and awaken the dead. Ah! I knew for whom she searched, When our right flank was doubled back on the centre and the re- giment confused and mingled, I fouad him at my eide. He belonged to the Sixth Rhode Island. I pointed to the #pot whero he lay, half his handsome face shot away by the terrible grape, and with a shriek she knelt beside him, saw her white fingers toying with his brown curls. I saw her hold his hand and klss it again and again. By-and-by she rose up and with hand outstre‘ched toward the ragged clouds of night she cried aloud: *‘And you call this victory! You crip- ple and kill and break hearts and make widows and orphans, and you wave your flags in rejoicing!” e ‘Wei de Meyer. It it now undisputed that Wie Die Mey- er's Catarrh Care is the only treatment that will absolutely cure Catarrh—fresh or Chronfe. “Very _efficacions. Saml Gould, Veeping Water, Neb.” Ono box cured me, Mrs, Mary Konyon, Bismarck, Dakota,” *‘Tt restored me to the pulpit, Rev. George K. Reis, Orbloville, N, V" “Ona box. radiosily curod me, Rev. C, H. Tnhlor, 140 Noble street, Brooklyn'” ‘A perfect cure after 30 years suffering, J. D. McDonald, 710 Broad- , &c. Thousands of testimo,- d from all arts of the worldi- Delivered, $1.0u, Dr. Wei De Meyer's Iby lustrated Treaties,” with statemonts of the cured, mailed fr 112 Fulton Street, v tue-t.hurs —— A Swindled Darkey, Texas Siftings. “‘Sandy” Jim as he is called, is one of the most qudrrelsome negroes in Austin, but he always gets the worst of every fight that he gets into. He always starts the fight, and invariably gets trashed, Some days ago he was fined ten dollars for not complying with some sanitary ordinance that required him to clean up his back yard. As he paid over the money, he sighed and groaned as if he was sick, and shaking his head, said to the jusf *Dis hoah money am jess as good as frowed away. Hit don’t do me no good. ‘When I hat dat furse wid Jim Webster, and got my arm broke, I only had ter pay five dollars, and I was laid upa whole week. I don’t mean nuffin pussonal, jedge, but hit don’t seem to me I was get- tin’ the wuff ob my money.” *‘That’s not my fault, Jim,” responded the justice. *‘If you don’t clean up your yard, you will have to pay for i ‘‘But, jedge, foah God, you is asking too much. 'fen dollars! Whew! Down & sat-m&3em T and many other di refund, but refer you to the manufaoturers, and the Yollow Wrapper; the of siro to sond olfio Medi In ago, or six paokages for 86, or will be sent free by mall on the recelpt of the mon: gold_n Omaha ¥ Prayer to sond the Exo D. B. Dewey & Co., [ — STECK PIAND The Steck is a Durahle Piano. 215 OPERA HOUSE, F. SCHEUERMANN, M. D, Homoeopathio Physician. 10 n. mu., wnd atter 8 and 105 GRAY'S BPECIFIO M RADE MARY 1% URKAT Kivw-y i OE MARR L18n REMADY. An unfailing cure for I W BURLINGTON, TOWA. THE LARGEST |RON WORKS N THE STATE The Murray Iron WoRks, ENGINES, BOILERS, haw, and ' all .potenay, Disonses " SPECIALTIES. BRIDGE WORK, \WONTECTz, IRON WORK. ABENTS FOR THE HYATT PRISMATIC LIGHTS SEND FOR ESTIMATES. et IAII‘" y, Uniy ( - ~ ««#ORE TAKINO, saiLassitude, Pain AFTER TARINE, n the Back, Dimnoss of Vision, Prema. Awe ases that load to1 on. ture Grave. ato rotand money, when o mot Automatie Cut-0ff Engines, Steam Pumps, Medt Cutting Machines, Tanking Outfits & Presses Wheeled Scrapers, Fruit Evaporators, Prairie Corn Shellers | MILL AND :MINING MACHINERY: PATEN] L0G 008 AND SAW! MILL SPECIALTIES. umption and a P BRWARR of adve drugyists from whon the medicine is bou y ate seldom, {f ever 0. A tria ¢ will convinoe ta. siters, wo have adopted the goutiine, # In out pamphlet, which _wede- ail to every one. £& The Spe- 1d by all druggista at §1 por pack & Full pa SPECIAL NOTIOE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE OALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. It isthe best nnd cheapost food for stook of any kind. Gne pound Ia equal to three pounds of com stock ted with Ground Oil Cake fn the Fali ana Winter, instoad of running down, will incroase in weight and bo In good marketablo oond.tion in the spring. Dairymen, as woll as otliers, who use it can testity ¢ its merits. Try it and fudgs for yourselvee, = Prico 825.00 por ton Address MAN LI NY, Omahs Neb , by addressing + suffalo, N. Y. 1y 19ma ECRET MALADIES find radical cure b method, based on recent entific researches, even in the most desperate cases without any trouble to the functions. I cure equally the sad con- consequences of the sins of youth, nervousness and im- potenc THE GRAY MEDICINE my DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFEY, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. LORO Farnam Streeot. Omakh J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN . Lamber, Lath, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, Omaha, Neb, STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., Wholesale Grocers H.B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, iffone ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of all grades of above; also pipes and smokers’ articles carried in DISURETION GUARANTEED. oknese. t description of the § DR. BELLA, Member of Several Scientific Societies. ©, Place de la Nation 6,-PARIS, m&o wedksat TEIXE HAS NO SUPERIOR. HE STECK HAS SINGING QUALITY OF TONg FOUND IN NO OTHER PIANO, SOLD ONLY BY WOODBRIDGE BROS., OMAHA NE REJULAR GERMAN BPECIALIST OF WOMEN, CHILDREN & CHRONIC DISEASES. Hours—At Residence, No. 1443 8. 10th Stroot, till . Hours—At offico, No. 108 15th 8t. m 7, from 10 a. m., 0 8 p, m. 0 Tape Worm will bo reweved, w taou or, In élme of from 9 to 8 hourn. in Galbeston I only had ter pay ten dol- lars for de furse I had wid a white man, who frowed a haudful of buckshot inter me, and put me in de hospital fer six munts, If I had been busted ober de head wid a pistc] by de p'liceman who ‘rested me for nut cleaning up dat yard, I wouldn’t hab said a word; but ter put down ten dollars fer nuffin, when I hasn’t eben been kicked, or called a black scoundrel, why, jedge, hit’s puffecly ridicklis,” and he went off grumbling and shaking his head, satisfied that he had been of his constitutional SJu—— ord's Atla PROTHRAte, Incomparable in Sick Headache. Dr. Fred Horner, Jr., Salem, Va., says. *'To relieve the indigustion and so-called sick hegdache and mental de- pression inciaent to certain stages of rheumatism, it i incomparable.” ! e —— v THE CENTURY PLANT, It Blooms, Cleavland Herald, Said a well-known florist to a reporter yesterday, in response to the queery whether he ever saw a century plant in bloom: Only once, and that was a great many years ago in a conservatory in Lon- don, when a plant, geneially supposed to have attained tCe age of 100 years, be- gan to show signes of life by sending cut a stem in the centea, which grew from seven to eight inches daily. It at once began to attract general witention, The stem grew larger overy day. Tho plant was moved from pla..» td place, for the glass roof wa , not hizn enough, until at a last resort it was placed under the cup- ola, Beforo many days the stem reached the cupola roof, and, in order that its progress might not be rotarded, the glass was removed and tho roof raised. When the stem had attained a height of about forty-tive feet, if I remember rightly, it stoped growing, and numerocs small branches grow eut of the maid stem, each of which was stopped with a cluster of magnificent greenish-yellow flowers, forming a solid bush of beautiful flowers, of about ten feet in height. It scemed to me all London flucked to see that flow- er, and it was the topic of conversation everywhere,” *'la it a fact that they bloom ole svery one hundred years” “‘That's a mistaken idea, which has long ago been exploded. The American aloe, or contury plant, as it is commonly known, will someiime bloom when but twenty-five years old, 1t altogether de- dends upon the climate and vpon the care. At times it will not bloom unless it has attained the age of 100 years, but there are not many aloes in northern cli- mates which attain such an age.” ‘‘Are they a popular house plantin this region{” *'Yes, they are growing in popularity every year, but, as a rule, people do not know how to treat them, and * the conse- quence is that they die before they are any kind of an ornament.” *‘What do you consider a proper mode of treatment of that planti’l . *'ln the first place they must be placed in a wooden pot, pa'l, or keg—earthen- ware pots are lisble to be injurious. Before planting them it is essential that the dariuagr should be perfect—say three large round holes in the bottom—and be- fore placing the earth in the vessel a qurntity of broken crockery or pebbles at the bottom will improve its drainage. 1t also requires constant Iluring, and @ great deal os opre and attention,” **Will a century plant bloom more than once!” “No, sir; after the disappearance of the flowers the plant withers and dies, and no care in the world will save it.’ rol “What Can't Be Oured Endured,” ‘This old adege does not signify that must suffer the miseries of dyspepsia, when aged us when we wavered under the storm of grape. They sank down be- side him and while the childron moaned E:‘f'fi'.‘.:;""‘ ml:“"““ rml_fiar o ,,‘:’_ £r.0: M. Druco, Lincoln, Nebrasks, or Wan. Dally, . dack Blood Bites s avallable® It o ons of FRED AL WOOD, Office and Yard, 61h and Louglas ts., nmaha Ngb sold to-day. 39 117 2184 Jo 16 to 26 eod Auctioueors. . Science of Life, Only $1.00. ON MANHOOD - - h ¥ and ofd. Tt Gontains 125 prescripti and chronic diseases Bo found by the Author, whose experionce for 23 yoars fs fany physic an pages, boun mna{ sl ‘m o0ssed covers, full gilt, guarantéed orary and professlonal,—than any other work sold in $his country for §2.50, or the money will be refunded medal awarded the author by Assoolation, to the officers of which he refers. Some Mistaken Ideas About It—When | ™ ence of Lifo will ent, guardian, (nstructoror clorgy: . Parker, No, 4 Bulfinch Streot, Boston Ms may bo consulbed on all diseases’ requiring s experience. Chronic and obs bafflod fhe skill of all other phys. »_spoolalty: without an Instano mhokw. THURSDAY, JUNE 26TH, Horos, from my own herd of Neqraska bred cattle, one of the oldest Kontucky breeders, will sell with e 16 head of superior aniwals o hij d fomales and 8 bulls breoders aud farmers of Nebras spect this Lot of cattle, s we will commend them o your 1 MMy offerings co , (by Must Be | Adelsie’ Matilda the stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. BY MAIL POSTPAID. f AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND PO WDER Co KHOW THYSE A GREAT MEDICAL WORK PERFECTION Heating and Baking s only attained by using ‘CHAR OAK Stoves and Rauzes, WITH WIRE RAUZE OVER DOOR Fa sale by MILTON ROGERS & SON3 OMAHA Exkensted Viallty, uro Decline {n told misorlesfe Nervous and Physical Debility, Man, Engrag) ¥onthe 3l oung, ntiddle-aged; lons for all wui.. each one of which is invaluable such asprobably never before foll to the Ict beau finer wors _n every sense,—in: fcal, 1t in every Instance. Price only §1.00 by mall, post- pai Tiusteabivo samplo foants. Sord now: G4 the National Medic-1 Tho Sciense of Liteshould be read by the youn ruction, and by the afflioted for rellef. I 4 all. —London Lancet. of soclety 40 whom The Sci- be useful, whether youth, par- man. —Argonaut. Addroes tho Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. There 1s no mem} 0..M. LEIGHTON. H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNAKD BROS. & C0.) Wiolesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— Qils. Brusnes Olasg, - NEBRASKA siu s E lF Huch success. tally Paints. OMAHA, podromer ‘v : | Milwaukee, Wis. e y Ktable and ufactiurers, Ty 0 others L an s, cter| innry Manaal, ( ceipt Of 1 109 Fulton treet, NERVOUS DEBILIT HUM PHREE ¥ Vital Weakness and Pros ihiL | GUNTHER & CO0., Sole Bottlers. tration_ from overwork of M. HELLMAN & CO, 'Wholesale CTlothiers 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 15Th rice T ®, COMBINATION Public Sale OF SUPERIOR SHORT HORNS | MAHA, SLOMAN BROTHERS, RECENTLY FROM FREMONT, NEB, WHOLESALE LEATHER, SADDLERY SADDLERY YARDWARE, HIDES, PELTS, FURS, TALLOW, WOOL. —WE PAY THE— HIGHEST MARKET PRICES For Hides, Wool, Pelts, Etc., and consignmzents made to us will receive prompt attention, for which immediate returns will be made. 13th Street, Bet. Dodge and Capitol Ave., - - OMAHA, NEB At Lincoln, Neb., 1884, at 1 O'Clock p. m. 1 will sell 45 head of very choio well bred Shors ared on Nebravks grassee. ANS. . SHROPSHIRE, of Leesburg, Kentucky, FRED W. GRAY. (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) LUMBEIR, LIME AND CEMENT. N\ eding—7 solic’t the cattle ud vicinity o in- their superiority We_car: or, s in 35 fomalos snd 10 bulls, Feprescnting the following familics: Iai Barnaby), Ruby's. Lady ENzabeth's, rincecses Jane's, Zelle's Lady with othere. Cattle will be at the Checkered ‘i S e, (oo Ao S0 day of Jue, to ‘, 3, dey of sale. Fur further partioulars, address Fred. M. Wood

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